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Armenian Kabob & Mediterranean Grill

Google: 4.8 · 796 reviews

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CuisineArmenian
Executive ChefArmen Martirosyan
Price≈$20
Dress CodeCasual
ServiceCasual
NoiseConversational
CapacityIntimate
LA Times
Opinionated About Dining

Tucked into a quiet Glendale side street, Mini Kabob transforms humble Armenian family recipes into an intimate, destination-worthy ritual. Skewers hiss over charcoal, perfuming the air with smoke and spice as succulent chicken, lamb, and beef are pulled from the flames at their precise peak. Silky hummus, tangy sumac-dusted onions, and warm lavash complete a plate that’s both rustic and refined—food that feels deeply personal yet plated with a chef’s restraint. With just a handful of seats and a fiercely loyal following, Mini Kabob is the kind of insider address discerning travelers whisper to friends: a tiny counter with outsized flavor, where hospitality is generous, pacing is deliberate, and every bite tells the story of a family’s craft perfected over time.

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Mini Kabob restaurant in Los Angeles, United States
About

Glendale's Armenian Grill Counter and the Meal It Builds

Los Angeles has always processed its immigrant food traditions through a particular filter: the storefront counter, the takeout container, the loyal neighborhood regulars who drive the word-of-mouth that no press release can manufacture. Glendale's Armenian community, one of the largest outside of Armenia itself, has sustained that tradition for decades. Within it, a concentration of small family operations has built reputations entirely on the quality of a single grill. Mini Kabob, operating from a compact address on Vine Street, belongs to that lineage. The Martirosyan family has run it with the consistency that produces real critical attention: ranked 42nd on the LA Times 101 Best Restaurants list for 2024, and placed 90th in Opinionated About Dining's Cheap Eats in North America rankings for 2025. A Google rating of 4.8 across 738 reviews adds the kind of crowd signal that sustains a venue through years of quietly full order lines.

The Sequence on the Plate

Armenian grilled meat cooking operates on a logic of restraint and precision. The seasoning is deliberate; the fat content is calibrated; the cook on the grill is not a shortcut but the whole point. At Mini Kabob, that logic plays out across a short menu that reads more like a focused argument than a list of options. Understanding how the meal progresses from first bite to last is the clearest way to understand what the venue is doing.

The Opening: Hummus and the Preparation Before the Grill

Every plate arrives with hummus, and the logic of that pairing is older than any individual restaurant. In Armenian and broader Levantine traditions, the spread before the protein is not filler; it is the palate reset between courses, the cool contrast to the char that follows. The hummus here sets the table, literally and structurally, for what the grill produces. The rice that accompanies each plate serves a similar function: it absorbs the juices, catches the fat, and extends the flavor of the main proteins across the full container.

The Center: Lule Kebab and the Chemistry of Ground Meat

The lule kebab is where the technical confidence of this kind of cooking becomes legible. Ground meat kebabs are unforgiving: too little fat and they dry out on the grill; too much and they fall apart or turn greasy. The Martirosyan family grinds both chicken and beef on the premises, incorporating fat at a ratio precise enough that the finished lule yields to a fork with minimal pressure. The LA Times review described the result as kebabs that "succumb to the slightest touch of a fork," which is the benchmark any good lule is measured against. This is the center of the meal's arc, the dish that most directly demonstrates the kitchen's command of the process.

The Second Movement: Chicken Kebab and the Beef Cutlet

Chicken kebab, grilled well, is harder than it appears. The margin between cooked through and dried out is narrow, and most counters err toward safety and lose the juice in the process. The chicken kebab here holds moisture in a way that the LA Times critic cited directly, describing it as among the juiciest versions encountered. The beef cutlet operates on a different principle: loosely packed with fresh herbs, hand-formed rather than pressed, then seared in a pan until a deep brown crust forms. That crust is doing specific work, creating the textural contrast that a loosely packed patty needs to hold together as an eating experience. These two dishes represent the mid-meal movement, proteins that reward attention to technique.

The Peak: Lamb Chops and Smoke

Lamb chops on a small grill, cooked correctly, carry smoke in a way that pork or chicken rarely achieves at the same scale. The fat on a lamb chop renders in contact with the grill grates and creates the aromatic result that distinguishes properly grilled lamb from oven-finished approximations. The LA Times description of the chops as "plump, tender and kissed with smoke" locates them precisely in that tradition. At a small counter operation with no wood-fired theater, that result comes entirely from technique and the quality of the starting product.

The Close: Blistered Vegetables and Garlic Sauce

The grilled jalapeños and tomatoes served alongside each plate are not garnish. In Armenian and Middle Eastern grilling traditions, vegetables on the grill are a dish in themselves, their skins blistered and blackened to produce a sweetness and smokiness that raw or roasted versions do not replicate. They extend the meal's arc past the proteins and provide the sharpness that resets the palate. The garlic sauce, described in the LA Times review with the kind of specificity usually reserved for fine-dining condiments, functions as the final punctuation on the plate: a smooth paste whose intensity lingers well past the meal itself.

Glendale, Armenian Los Angeles, and the Counter Format

The counter format at this scale sits at a specific intersection in how Los Angeles processes its dining culture. The city's critical establishment has learned, over the past decade, to apply the same analytic attention to a Glendale takeout counter that it applies to a tasting-menu restaurant. The LA Times 101 Best Restaurants list, which also includes venues like Providence, Kato, and Somni, placing Mini Kabob at number 42 represents that editorial decision explicitly. It positions a family-run Armenian grill counter in the same conversation as Osteria Mozza and other formally recognized restaurants, which is an argument about what Los Angeles's dining identity actually consists of.

For Armenian cuisine specifically in the United States, that recognition matters. The community in Glendale has maintained a food culture that connects directly to Yerevan and the Armenian diaspora, and small operations that specialize in a single technique carry that culture more faithfully than larger, more broadly conceived venues. For comparison in the Armenian dining space, Zhengyalov Hatz in Los Angeles represents the flatbread tradition, while Taline in Toronto sits at a different register of that cuisine entirely. The grill counter is its own category within that tradition, and Mini Kabob has become the most publicly recognized example of it in the city.

The takeout model has also shaped how the restaurant exists in the social fabric of the neighborhood. The LA Times review noted the practice of eating the kebabs in a car parked nearby, or arriving at a friend's home with bags of food from Mini Kabob as a gesture of regard. That description captures something real about how counter food at this level functions: it travels well, it serves groups, and it becomes embedded in the routines of the people who return to it. Venues with that kind of local attachment operate differently from destinations visited once for a special occasion.

For context on the broader Los Angeles dining scene, the full Los Angeles restaurants guide maps the range from counter formats like this to multi-course tasting menus such as Alinea-adjacent formal dining. Visitors spending time in Los Angeles should also consult the Los Angeles hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide for the full picture. For those building a broader US dining itinerary, Le Bernardin in New York, Lazy Bear in San Francisco, The French Laundry in Napa, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, Emeril's in New Orleans, and Atomix in New York represent the formal end of the spectrum that Mini Kabob sits entirely outside of, and is none the worse for it.

Know Before You Go

  • Address: 313 1/2 Vine St, Glendale, CA 91204
  • Format: Counter service, takeout
  • Recognition: LA Times 101 Best Restaurants 2024 (No. 42); Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats in North America 2025 (No. 90)
  • Google Rating: 4.8 from 738 reviews
  • Hours: Verify directly with the venue before visiting
  • Booking: Walk-in counter; no reservation system reported
  • Getting there: Glendale is accessible via the 134 and 2 freeways; street and lot parking available in the immediate area
Signature Dishes
  • Chicken Cutlet Kabob
  • Lamb Chops
  • Beef Lule
  • Garlic Sauce
  • Hummus
  • Eggplant Caviar
Frequently asked questions

Price and Positioning

A quick peer reference to anchor this venue in its category.

At a Glance
Vibe
  • Hidden Gem
  • Cozy
  • Rustic
Best For
  • Casual Hangout
  • Group Dining
  • Solo
Experience
  • Open Kitchen
Sourcing
  • Local Sourcing
Dress CodeCasual
Noise LevelConversational
CapacityIntimate
Service StyleCasual
Meal PacingStandard

Intimate and homey with an open kitchen view; minimal decor with a single sidewalk picnic table and one small table inside seating up to 8 people total. Warm, welcoming atmosphere created by the family owners.

Signature Dishes
  • Chicken Cutlet Kabob
  • Lamb Chops
  • Beef Lule
  • Garlic Sauce
  • Hummus
  • Eggplant Caviar